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General Physics (PHY 2140). Lecture 26. Modern Physics Relativity Relativistic momentum, energy, … General relativity. http://www.physics.wayne.edu/~apetrov/PHY2140/. Chapter 26. If you want to know your progress so far, please send me an email request at apetrov@physics.wayne.edu.
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General Physics (PHY 2140) Lecture 26 • Modern Physics • Relativity • Relativistic momentum, energy, … • General relativity http://www.physics.wayne.edu/~apetrov/PHY2140/ Chapter 26
If you want to know your progress so far, please send me an email request at apetrov@physics.wayne.edu
Lightning Review • Last lecture: • Modern physics • Time dilation, length contraction Review Problem: A planar electromagnetic wave is propagating through space. Its electric field vector is given by E = Eo cos(kz – wt) x, where x is a unit vector in the positive direction of Ox axis. Its magnetic field vector is 1. B = Bo cos(kz – wt) y 2. B = Bo cos(ky – wt) z 3. B = Bo cos(ky – wt) x 4. B = Bo cos(kz – wt) z where y and z are unit vectors in the positive directions of Oy and Oz axes respectively.
Reminder (for those who don’t read syllabus) Reading Quizzes (bonus 5%): It is important for you to come to class prepared, i.e. be familiar with the material to be presented. To test your preparedness, a simple five-minute quiz, testing your qualitative familiarity with the material to be discussed in class, will be given at the beginning of some of the classes. No make-up reading quizzes will be given. There could be one today… … but then again…
Problem: relativistic pion • The average lifetime of a p meson in its own frame of reference (i.e., the proper lifetime) is 2.6 × 10–8 s. If the meson moves with a speed of 0.98c, what is • its mean lifetime as measured by an observer on Earth and • the average distance it travels before decaying as measured by an observer on Earth? • What distance would it travel if time dilation did not occur?
The average lifetime of a p meson in its own frame of reference (i.e., the proper lifetime) is 2.6 × 10–8 s. If the meson moves with a speed of 0.98c, what is (a) its mean lifetime as measured by an observer on Earth and (b) the average distance it travels before decaying as measured by an observer on Earth? (c) What distance would it travel if time dilation did not occur? Recall that the time measured by observer on Earth will be longer then the proper time. Thus for the lifetime Given: v = 0.98 c tp = 2.6 × 10–8 s Find: t = ? d = ? dn =? Thus, at this speed it will travel If special relativity were wrong, it would only fly about
Problem: space flight • In 1963 when Mercury astronaut Gordon Cooper orbited Earth 22 times, the press stated that for each orbit he aged 2 millionths of a second less than if he had remained on Earth. • Assuming that he was 160 km above Earth in a circular orbit, determine the time difference between someone on Earth and the orbiting astronaut for the 22 orbits. You will need to use the approximation • for x << 1 • (b) Did the press report accurate information? Explain.
Length Contraction • The measured distance between two points depends on the frame of reference of the observer • The proper length, Lp, of an object is the length of the object measured by someone at rest relative to the object • The length of an object measured in a reference frame that is moving with respect to the object is always less than the proper length • This effect is known as length contraction
Problem: weird cube • A box is cubical with sides of proper lengths L1 = L2 = L3= 2 m, when viewed in its own rest frame. If this block moves parallel to one of its edges with a speed of 0.80c past an observer, • what shape does it appear to have to this observer, and • what is the length of each side as measured by this observer?
A box is cubical with sides of proper lengths L1 = L2 = L3= 2 m, when viewed in its own rest frame. If this block moves parallel to one of its edges with a speed of 0.80c past an observer, (a) what shape does it appear to have to this observer, and (b) what is the length of each side as measured by this observer? Recall that only the length in the direction of motion is contracted, so • Given: • v = 0.8 c • Lip = 2.0 m • Find: • shape • Li=? Thus, numerically,
Relativistic Definitions • To properly describe the motion of particles within special relativity, Newton’s laws of motion and the definitions of momentum and energy need to be generalized • These generalized definitions reduce to the classical ones when the speed is much less than c
26.7 Relativistic Momentum • To account for conservation of momentum in all inertial frames, the definition must be modified • v is the speed of the particle, m is its mass as measured by an observer at rest with respect to the mass • When v << c, the denominator approaches 1 and so p approaches mv
Problem: particle decay An unstable particle at rest breaks up into two fragments of unequal mass. The mass of the lighter fragment is 2.50 × 10–28 kg, and that of the heavier fragment is 1.67 × 10–27 kg. If the lighter fragment has a speed of 0.893c after the breakup, what is the speed of the heavier fragment?
An unstable particle at rest breaks up into two fragments of unequal mass. The mass of the lighter fragment is 2.50 × 10–28 kg, and that of the heavier fragment is 1.67 × 10–27 kg. If the lighter fragment has a speed of 0.893c after the breakup, what is the speed of the heavier fragment? Momentum must be conserved, so the momenta of the two fragments must add to zero. Thus, their magnitudes must be equal, or Given: v1 = 0.8 c m1=2.50×10–28 kg m2=1.67×10–27 kg Find: v2 = ? For the heavier fragment, which reduces to and yields
26.8 Relativistic Addition of Velocities • Galilean relative velocities cannot be applied to objects moving near the speed of light • Einstein’s modification is • The denominator is a correction based on length contraction and time dilation
Problem: more spaceships… A spaceship travels at 0.750c relative to Earth. If the spaceship fires a small rocket in the forward direction, how fast (relative to the ship) must it be fired for it to travel at 0.950c relative to Earth?
A spaceship travels at 0.750c relative to Earth. If the spaceship fires a small rocket in the forward direction, how fast (relative to the ship) must it be fired for it to travel at 0.950c relative to Earth? Since vES = -VSE = velocity of Earth relative to ship, the relativistic velocity addition equation gives Given: vSE = 0.750 c vRE = 0.950 c Find: vRS = ?
26.9 Relativistic Energy • The definition of kinetic energy requires modification in relativistic mechanics KE = mc2 – mc2 • The term mc2 is called the rest energy of the object and is independent of its speed • The term mc2 is the total energy, E, of the object and depends on its speed and its rest energy
Relativistic Energy – Consequences • A particle has energy by virtue of its mass alone • A stationary particle with zero kinetic energy has an energy proportional to its inertial mass E = mc2 • The mass of a particle may be completely convertible to energy and pure energy may be converted to particles
Energy and Relativistic Momentum • It is useful to have an expression relating total energy, E, to the relativistic momentum, p • E2 = p2c2+ (mc2)2 • When the particle is at rest, p = 0 and E = mc2 • Massless particles (m = 0) have E = pc • This is also used to express masses in energy units • mass of an electron = 9.11 x 10-31 kg = 0.511 MeV • Conversion: 1 u = 929.494 MeV/c2
A photon is reflected from a mirror. True or false: (a) Because a photon has a zero mass, it does not exert a force on the mirror. (b) Although the photon has energy, it cannot transfer any energy to the surface because it has zero mass. (c) The photon carries momentum, and when it reflects off the mirror, it undergoes a change in momentum and exerts a force on the mirror. (d) Although the photon carries momentum, its change in momentum is zero when it reflects from the mirror, so it cannot exert a force on the mirror. QUICK QUIZ • False • False • True • False
Example 1: Pair Production • An electron and a positron are produced and the photon disappears • A positron is the antiparticle of the electron, same mass but opposite charge • Energy, momentum, and charge must be conserved during the process • The minimum energy required is 2me = 1.04 MeV
Example 2: Pair Annihilation • In pair annihilation, an electron-positron pair produces two photons • The inverse of pair production • It is impossible to create a single photon • Momentum must be conserved
26.10 General relativity: Mass – Inertial vs. Gravitational • Mass has a gravitational attraction for other masses • Mass has an inertial property that resists acceleration • Fi = mi a • The value of G was chosen to make the values of mg and mi equal
Einstein’s Reasoning Concerning Mass • That mg and mi were directly proportional was evidence for a basic connection between them • No mechanical experiment could distinguish between the two • He extended the idea to no experiment of any type could distinguish the two masses
Postulates of General Relativity • All laws of nature must have the same form for observers in any frame of reference, whether accelerated or not • In the vicinity of any given point, a gravitational field is equivalent to an accelerated frame of reference without a gravitational field • This is the principle of equivalence
Implications of General Relativity • Gravitational mass and inertial mass are not just proportional, but completely equivalent • A clock in the presence of gravity runs more slowly than one where gravity is negligible • The frequencies of radiation emitted by atoms in a strong gravitational field are shifted to lower frequencies • This has been detected in the spectral lines emitted by atoms in massive stars
More Implications of General Relativity • A gravitational field may be “transformed away” at any point if we choose an appropriate accelerated frame of reference – a freely falling frame • Einstein specified a certain quantity, the curvature of time-space, that describes the gravitational effect at every point
Testing General Relativity • General Relativity predicts that a light ray passing near the Sun should be deflected by the curved space-time created by the Sun’s mass • The prediction was confirmed by astronomers during a total solar eclipse
Black Holes • If the concentration of mass becomes great enough, a black hole is believed to be formed • In a black hole, the curvature of space-time is so great that, within a certain distance from its center, all light and matter become trapped